Doriane Pin penalised for failing to notice F1 Academy race in Saudi Arabia was over; French driver handed 20-second penalty and drops to ninth with Britains Abbi Pulling elevated to winner; Sky Sports F1s Damon Hill criticises decision, saying lights should also indicate end of race

  • @TheGrandNagus
    link
    English
    41
    edit-2
    10 months ago

    A greater penalty for this than for offenses like brake testing, causing a crash, or an unsafe release. The FIA is a fucking joke.

    • @GeneralEmergency
      link
      1110 months ago

      I know F1 fans need to get their daily Fuck the FIA. But you cannot be serious.

      Driving at racing speed on a track considered not live, with the potential of marshalls and other track staff on the other side of the barriers. Is generally frowned upon.

      Intentional wrecking is also harshly punished. There’s a reason you don’t see it outside the very low levels.

      Magnusson got a ten second penalty and three points. Perez may have “only” gotten five seconds and one point. But both of these incidents happened on a live track during a race session.

      Trying to make any connection between the penalties is a pointless endeavour.

    • leaskovski
      link
      fedilink
      610 months ago

      That said, aren’t all the marshals waving flags after the race is finished? If so, that would mean she is ignoring them, or was that not the case here?

      • @TheGrandNagus
        link
        English
        210 months ago

        Wasn’t the case here. Due to the crappy position of the person waving the chequered flag, and her team not giving her info, she had no way to know the race had ended unless she was accurately counting laps from the start.

    • @SatouKazuma
      link
      410 months ago

      Hey, at least jokes make people laugh. This is just another instance of the FIA being a cancer to the sport. Worst of all is that I’m not even sure any amount of anti-corruption drive will fix errors like this that are just straight up idiocy at its, uh…“finest”. Between the FIA and Formula 1, open-wheel racing is really not having a good start to the year.